L’Azerbaïdjan menace à nouveau l’Arménie

HAUT-KARABAGH
L’Azerbaïdjan menace à nouveau l’Arménie

Le ministre de la Défense Safar Abiyev a affirmé que l’Azerbaïdjan a
renouvelé ses menaces au sujet du conflit du Nagorno-Karabagh mardi 14
août. « Ne voulant pas redonner pacifiquement les territoires occupés
de l’Azerbaïdjan, l’Arménie est chaque jour exposée à une nouvelle
guerre », a dit Abiyev au Général Myles Deering, le commandant de la
Garde nationale d’Oklahoma.

Abiyev s’est plaint de l’échec des négociations du groupe de Minsk de
l’OSCE qui n’ont produit aucun résultat concrets.« Dans ces
circonstances, a-t-il dit, l’Azerbaïdjan n’a pas d’autre choix que de
libérer les territoires occupés. »

Les dirigeants azerbaïdjanais ont menacé de reprendre le contrôle des
terres du Haut-Karabakh. La partie arménienne a condamné et a rejeté
ces menaces, disant que l’armée azerbaïdjanaise ferait face à une
défaite.

Les Etats-Unis, l’Union européenne et la Russie se sont également
prononcés contre une solution militaire au sujet du conflit
arméno-azerbaïdjanais.

La secrétaire d’Etat américaine Hillary Clinton a averti sur les
conséquences imprévisibles et catastrophiques en cas de reprise des
combats dans la zone de conflit lors de sa visite à Erevan et à Bakou
au mois de juin.« L’utilisation de la force ne résoudra pas le
conflit du Nagorno-Karabakh. La force ne doit donc pas être utilisée
», a dit Mme Clinton.

mercredi 15 août 2012,
Laetitia ©armenews.com

BAKU: Azerbaijan buys 47 warcrafts, 109 helicopters over decade

Azerbaijan buys 47 warcrafts, 109 helicopters over decade

Mon 13 August 2012 09:44 GMT | 10:44 Local Time

Azerbaijan took important steps for strengthening the military airpark
over the last 10 years.
As a result of researches conducted by APA on the basis of reports of
the UN Register of Conventional Arms, in 2001-2011, Baku strengthened
its aviation park with new warcrafts, combat helicopters and unmanned
aerial vehicles.

According to reports presented by the purchasing and selling
countries, Azerbaijan bough 47 warcrafts and 109 helicopters from
various countries over the last 10 years. Azerbaijan included more
than 30 unmanned aerial vehicles to the armament of the Armed Forces.

During analysis of reports, Azerbaijan bought warcrafts from 4
countries – Ukraine, Russia, Belarus and Georgia, helicopters – from
Russia and Ukraine, UAV’s from Israeli and local enterprises.

Azerbaijan bought 13 Su-25 warcrafts (12 Su-25 and 1 Su-25UB) from
Georgia, 12 L-39, 16 MiG-29 (2 MiG-29UB, 14 MiG-29) from Ukraine, 6
Su-25 from Belarus. In general, Azerbaijan included 19 Su-25, 15
MiG-29, 12 L-39 Albatros warcrafts to its airpark.

A s regards the helicopters, Azerbaijan bought 12 Mi-24 (1 Mi-24R)
from Ukraine, 24 Mi-35M, 71 Mi-8/Mi-17V1/Mi-171, 2 Ka-31 helicopters
from Russia. The agreement was signed with `Rosoboroneksport’ company
in 2010 on purchase of 84 helicopters (60 Mi-17V1 and 24 Mi-35M) and
the deliveries are being continued.

News.Az

MFA: Claims Ukraine sold missile systems to Armenia a provocation

Kyiv Post, Ukraine
Aug 14 2012

Foreign Ministry: Claims Ukraine sold missile systems to Armenia a provocation

Aug. 14, 2012, 3:10 p.m. | Ukraine

The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry has described as a provocation media
reports alleging that Ukraine sold multiple rocket launchers and
mobile missile systems to Armenia in 2011.

“These online claims of an unidentified origin are a provocation,”
Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Oleksandr Dykusarov said at a
press briefing on Tuesday.

Ukraine has been strictly observing the international obligations
assumed before the UN and the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, and the national legislation, as well, he said.

Given Ukraine’s upcoming presidency of the OSCE, Kyiv will continue
making maximum effort to strengthen security and stability in the
region, Dikusarov said.

The Ukrainian Embassy in Azerbaijan earlier denied media reports
claiming that Ukraine sold multiple rocket launchers and mobile
missile systems to Armenia in 2011.

http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/foreign-ministry-claims-ukraine-sold-missile-systems-to-armenia-a-provocation-311528.html

Armenian authorities dismissing Prosperous Armenia members

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Aug 14 2012

Armenian authorities dismissing Prosperous Armenia members

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan has recently fired deputy
ministers and vice governors of the Prosperous Armenia Party, NEWS.am
reports.

Although deputy minister for sports and youth policy and a PA member
Samvel Khachatryan maintain their positions.

The possible explanation is that the ministry is headed by a PA member
and because the process coincided with the Olympic Games. The games in
London have ended and Khachatryan is rumoured to be dismissed soon.

Gagik Tsarukian’s million did not help Armenia

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Aug 14 2012

Gagik Tsarukian’s million did not help Armenia

Author: Sergey Lazarian, Yerevan, exclusively to VK

See also: and

At the London Olympics, Armenia was represented by 25 athletes in nine
sporting events. Compared to the Beijing Olympics, the number of
Armenian athletes did not change, but rhythmic gymnastics and
taekwondo were added to the number of sporting events. Traditionally,
Armenia’s main hope for medals has been associated with weightlifting
and wrestling. In certain scenarios, it was possible to hope for
medals in boxing, shooting and taekwondo. In other events, the
Armenians were ruled by the motto `it’s not the winning, it’s the
taking part’.

After the 6 bronze medals won in Beijing in 2008, the Armenian sports
officials’ goal was to win an Olympic gold. A fabulous prize of $1
million from the president of the National Olympic Committee of
Armenia (NOC), Gagik Tsarukyan, was prepared for the winner. The
well-known businessman promised this amount to the Armenian Olympic
team four years ago, but it remained unclaimed. This time the head of
the National Olympic Committee refrained from official statements, but
made it clear that he would do his best for the winner.

In any case, the country did not get a 14th Olympic champion (Armenia
has 13 winners in the Games, who have won a total of 17 gold medals).
At first, the beginning of the Olympics was unlucky for the Armenian
athletes. Norayr Bakhtamyan, an experienced shooter, did not manage to
get through to the final, being eliminated before the quarter-finals.
Hovhannes Davtyan, an Armenian judoka, was a footstep away from a
bronze medal. Armen Nazarian, another Armenian judoka, left the mat
even before. Arthur Davtyan, a gymnast, is considered to be a
promising athlete, but he has still not brought an Olympic medal to
the country (he came 36th in the all-round competition). Swimmers
Michael Koloyan and Anahit Barseghyan arrived in London only because
of additional vacant positions provided by the IOC and, therefore, did
not demonstrate considerable results (45th and 44th places
respectively). A much more unpleasant surprise was the defeat of the
sole representative of Armenia in boxing, Andranik Hakobyan. Being up,
he managed to lose because of a technical knockout in the final 10
seconds of the fight. Athletes for whom getting to the Olympics can
already be considered a major success did not overcome the qualifying
competitions, and this was quite expected.

The most unpleasant surprise was presented by the weightlifters. One
after another, Arakel Mirzoyan, Meline Daluzyan and Ara Khachatryan
received `zeros”, unable to lift the ordered weight; these were
athletes who could really compete for a place on the podium. An
unexpected injury to the world champion of 2010 Tigran Martirosyan at
the finish of the final pre-Olympic camp in Podolsk added to all the
troubles. Against this background, the 11th position of the son of the
famous weightlifter Yuri Vardanyan-Norayr looks like an achievement,
though it sounds ironic. Expectations were met only in respect of
Hripsime Khurshudyan, who won a bronze medal in the heavyweight
division.

The fighters had to compensate for the failures of the weightlifters.
Arsene Julfalakyan (weight category 74 kg) was a footstep away from
the gold medal, almost repeating the achievement of his father and the
main coach of Armenia’s Greco-Roman wrestling team Levon Julfalakyan,
who became Olympic champion at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul. Having
reached the finals, Julfalakyan Jr. (pictured) was defeated by Roman
Vlasov (Russia) in a bitter struggle. 20-year-old Arthur Alexanyan (96
kg) also did quite well. Arthur participated in two fights with a
broken rib for the bronze medal against a Turk and a Cuban, overcoming
the pain.

Yuri Patrikeev, for whom these games were probably the last of his
career, did not reach the podium. The other wrestlers (1 Greco-Roman
wrestler and 3 freestyle wrestlers) returned home empty-handed. In
addition, Armen Yeremyan, representing Armenian taekwondo at the
Olympic Games for the first time, was defeated by a representative of
the host of the competition in the fight for the bronze medal.

Thus, Armenia failed to win any gold medals in London. Knowing the
ambitions of the leadership of the NOC, there is no doubt that the
outcome of the 2012 Games will result in a serious debriefing.

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/articles/sport/30179.html
http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/sport/2012-olympics/30171.html

Ukrainian MFA calls the info on selling missiles to Armenia `provoca

Mediamax, Armenia
Aug 14 2012

Ukrainian Foreign Ministry calls the information on selling missiles
to Armenia `provocation’

Yerevan/Mediamax/. The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry called the
information on selling arms to Armenia “provocation’.

UNIAN agency reports that the Ukrainian Foreign Minister’s spokesman
Alexander Dikusarov stated at a briefing today that `the information
sources placed in some internet resources are unknown and obviously
bear a provocative character’.

According to him, the Ukrainian side accurately adheres to its
international commitments undertaken within the membership to UN, OSCE
and international regimes of the expert control.

`Taking into account Ukraine ‘s upcoming presidency in the OSCE,
official Kiev makes and will make efforts toward reinforcing security
and stability in the region’, said Alexander Dikusarov.

The Georgian model to be shot in an Armenian movie

The Georgian model to be shot in an Armenian movie

21:29, 14 August, 2012

Yerevan, August 14, ARMENPRESS: Internationally popular Georgian model
Shorena Begashvili will play one of the main roles of the Armenian new
comedy `Love Poker’. In the interview with `Armenpress’ the PR
responsible of the `Sharm Holding’ Izabella Manasaryan noted that
Shorena immediately after reading the scenario agreed to participate
in the movie shootings.

`I liked the scenario from the very beginning, as it is not a love and
romantic movie, but a plot full of events, where the so called
`action’ dominates’, mentioned the actress. She also noted that she
likes cars and speed that is why she had participated in rallies for
many times.

`So when we talk about cars, I immediately agree’, Begashvili stated
adding that there is a certain similarity between her and the heroine
embodied in the movie.

`She is sexual and smart. I think every woman has little feminine
cunning’, added the model.

Shorena Begashvili is an internationally recognized model; she was
shot for the `Playboy’ magazine cover.

Together with the career of model she is shot in movies, she is also
one of the famous announcers in Tbilisi.

`Love Poker’ is represented by `A Millionaire is required’ and `Fiancé
from circus’ films creative and production teams. Before starting the
shootings in Yerevan, the team managed to be in Georgia, where
according to the scenario, the great part of the events will be
developed. `Rustavi 2′ TV supports the implementation of the shootings
in Georgia.

Armenian team plays a beautiful game: Belarus national team coach

Armenian team plays a beautiful game: Belarus national team coach

21:14, 14 August, 2012

Yerevan, August 14, ARMENPRESS: The Belarus team will demonstrate its
schematic game in the meeting to be held on August 15. As
`Aremenpress’ reports the Belarus national team coach George Kondratev
mentioned this in the briefing with the reporters. The latter stressed
that he was aware of all the former USSR countries’ teams, including
the Armenian team.

`The Armenian team plays an excellent game, but for us the score is
very important. Your midfielder Henrik Mkhitaryan and forward Yura
Movsisyan had left a great impression on me’. George Kondratev noted.

Coming to Andrei Khachaturov who is going to play in the Belarus team
against Armenia, George Kondratev stressed that Khachaturyan was
invited in the team when one of the Belarusians was injured.

The footballer Andrei Khachaturyan explaining the invitation received
by the Belarus national team stressed that it was quite unexpected
suggestion. `I find it difficult to say anything definite, but I
should estimate what I have. I cannot say what I would do if Armenia
were the first to invite’, mentioned Khachaturyan.

Armenia-Belarus friendly game will take place in the Vazgen Sargsyan
`Republican’ stadium at 20:00 on August 15.

Will Israel Strike Iran Before the Election?

Will Israel Strike Iran Before the Election?
by RAY McGOVERN
August 13, 2012

More Washington insiders are coming to the conclusion that Israel’s
leaders are planning to attack Iran before the U.S. election in
November in the expectation that American forces will be drawn in.
There is widespread recognition that, without U.S. military
involvement, an Israeli attack would be highly risky and, at best,
only marginally successful.

At this point, to dissuade Israeli leaders from mounting such an
attack might require a public statement by President Barack Obama
warning Israel not to count on U.S. forces – not even for the
`clean-up.’ Though Obama has done pretty much everything short of
making such a public statement, he clearly wants to avoid a
confrontation with Israel in the weeks before the election.

However, Obama’s silence regarding a public warning speaks volumes to
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The recent pilgrimages to Israel by very senior U.S. officials –
including the Secretaries of State and Defense carrying identical
`PLEASE DON’T BOMB IRAN JUST YET’ banners – has met stony faces and
stone walls.

Like the Guns of August in 1914, the dynamic for war appears
inexorable. Senior U.S. and Israeli officials focus publicly on a
`window of opportunity,’ but different ones.

On Thursday, White House spokesman Jay Carney emphasized the need to
allow the `most stringent sanctions ever imposed on any country time
to work.’ That, said Carney, is the `window of opportunity to persuade
Iran … to forgo its nuclear weapons ambitions.’

That same day a National Security Council spokesman dismissed Israeli
claims that U.S. intelligence had received alarming new information
about Iran’s nuclear program. `We continue to assess that Iran is not
on the verge of achieving a nuclear weapon,’ the spokesman said.

Still, Israel’s window of opportunity (what it calls the `zone of
immunity’ for Iran building a nuclear bomb without Israel alone being
able to prevent it) is ostensibly focused on Iran’s continued
burrowing under mountains to render its nuclear facilities immune to
Israeli air strikes, attacks that would seek to maintain Israel’s
regional nuclear-weapons monopoly.

But another Israeli `window’ or `zone’ has to do with the pre-election
period of the next 12 weeks in the United States. Last week, former
Mossad chief Efraim Halevi told Israeli TV viewers, `The next 12 weeks
are very critical in trying to assess whether Israel will attack
Iran, with or without American backup.’

It would be all too understandable, given Israeli Prime Minister
Netanyahu’s experience with President Obama, that Netanyahu has come
away with the impression that Obama can be bullied, particularly when
he finds himself in a tight political spot.

For Netanyahu, the President’s perceived need to outdistance
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney in the love-for-Israel
department puts Obama in a box. This, I believe, is the key `window of
opportunity’ that is uppermost in Netanyahu’s calculations.

Virtually precluded, in Netanyahu’s view, is any possibility that
Obama could keep U.S. military forces on the sidelines if Israel and
Iran became embroiled in serious hostilities. What I believe the
Israeli leader worries most about is the possibility that a
second-term Obama would feel much freer not to commit U.S. forces on
Israel’s side. A second-term Obama also might use U.S. leverage to
force Israeli concessions on thorny issues relating to Palestine.

If preventing Obama from getting that second term is also part of
Netanyahu’s calculation, then he also surely knows that even a minor
dustup with Iran, whether it escalates or not, would drive up the
price of gasoline just before the election – an unwelcome prospect for
Team Obama.

It’s obvious that hard-line Israeli leaders would much rather have
Mitt Romney to deal with for the next four years. The former
Massachusetts governor recently was given a warm reception when he
traveled to Jerusalem with a number of Jewish-American financial
backers in tow to express his solidarity with Netanyahu and his
policies.

Against this high-stakes political background, I’ve personally come by
some new anecdotal information that I find particularly troubling. On
July 30, the Baltimore Sun posted my op-ed, `Is Israel fixing the
intelligence to justify an attack on Iran?’ Information acquired the
very next day increased my suspicion and concern.

Former intelligence analysts and I were preparing a proposal to
establish direct communications links between the U.S. and Iranian
navies, in order to prevent an accident or provocation in the Persian
Gulf from spiraling out of control. Learning that an official Pentagon
draft paper on that same issue has been languishing in the Senate for
more than a month did not make us feel any better when our own
proposal was ignored. (Still, it is difficult to understand why anyone
wishing to avoid escalation in the Persian Gulf would delay, or
outright oppose, such fail-safe measures.)

Seeking input from other sources with insight into U.S. military
preparations, I learned that, although many U.S. military moves have
been announced, others, with the express purpose of preparation for
hostilities with Iran, have not been made public.

One source reported that U.S. forces are on hair-trigger alert and
that covert operations inside Iran (many of them acts of war, by any
reasonable standard) have been increased. Bottom line: we were warned
that the train had left the station; that any initiative to prevent
miscalculation or provocation in the Gulf was bound to be far too late
to prevent escalation into a shooting war.

SEARCHING FOR A CASUS BELLI

A casus belli – real or contrived – would be highly desirable prior to
an attack on Iran. A provocation in the Gulf would be one way to
achieve this. Iran’s alleged fomenting of terrorism would be another.

In my op-ed of July 30, I suggested that Netanyahu’s incredibly swift
blaming of Iran for the terrorist killing of five Israelis in Bulgaria
on July 18 may have been intended as a pretext for attacking Iran. If
so, sadly for Netanyahu, it didn’t work. It seems the Obama
administration didn’t buy the `rock-solid evidence’ Netanyahu adduced
to tie Iran to the attack in Bulgaria.

If at first you don’t succeed … Here’s another idea: let’s say there
is new reporting that shows Iran to be dangerously close to getting a
nuclear weapon, and that previous estimates that Iran had stopped work
on weaponization was either wrong or overtaken by new evidence.

According to recent Israeli and Western media reports, citing Western
diplomats and senior Israeli officials, U.S. intelligence has acquired
new information – `a bombshell’ report – that shows precisely that.
Imagine.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak told Israeli Radio that the new
report is `very close to our [Israel’s] own estimates, I would say, as
opposed to earlier American estimates. It transforms the Iranian
situation to an even more urgent one.’

Washington Post neocon pundit Jennifer Rubin was quick to pick up the
cue, expressing a wistful hope on Thursday that the new report on the
Iranian nuclear program `would be a complete turnabout from the
infamous 2007 National Intelligence Estimate that asserted that Iran
had dropped its nuclear weapons program.’

`Infamous?’ Indeed. Rubin warned, `The 2007 NIE report stands as a
tribute and warning regarding the determined obliviousness of our
national intelligence apparatus,’ adding that `no responsible
policymaker thinks the 2007 NIE is accurate.’

Yet, the NIE still stands as the prevailing U.S. intelligence
assessment on Iran’s nuclear intentions, reaffirmed by top U.S.
officials repeatedly over the past five years. Rubin’s definition of
`responsible’ seems to apply only to U.S. policymakers who would cede
control of U.S. foreign policy to Netanyahu.

The 2007 NIE reported, with `high confidence,’ the unanimous judgment
of all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies that Iran stopped working on a
nuclear weapon in the fall of 2003 and had not restarted it. George W.
Bush’s own memoir and remarks by Dick Cheney make it clear that this
honest NIE shoved a steel rod into the wheels of the juggernaut that
had begun rolling off toward war on Iran in 2008, the last year of the
Bush/Cheney administration.

The key judgments of the 2007 NIE have been re-asserted every year
since by the Director of National Intelligence in formal testimony to
Congress.

And, unfortunately for Rubin and others hoping to parlay the
reportedly `new,’ more alarmist `intelligence’ into an even more
bellicose posture toward Iran, a National Security Council spokesman
on Thursday threw cold water on the `new’ information, saying that
`the U.S. intelligence assessment of Iran’s nuclear activities had not
changed.’

Relying on the unconfirmed Israeli claim about `new’ U.S. information
regarding Iran’s nuclear program, Rubin had already declared the Obama
administration’s Iran policy a failure, writing:

`Foreign policy experts can debate whether a sanctions strategy was
flawed from its inception, incorrectly assessing the motivations of
the Iranian regime, or they can debate whether the execution of
sanctions policy (too slow, too porous) was to blame. But we are more
than 3 1/2 years into the Obama administration, and Iran is much
closer to its goal than at the start. By any reasonable measure, the
Obama approach has been a failure, whatever the NIE report might say.’

Pressures Will Persist

The NSC’s putdown of the Israeli report does not necessarily
guarantee, however, that President Obama will continue to withstand
pressure from Israel and its supporters to `fix’ the intelligence to
`justify’ supporting an attack on Iran.

Promise can be seen in Obama’s refusal to buy Netanyahu’s new
`rock-solid evidence’ on Iran’s responsibility for the terrorist
attack in Bulgaria. Hope can also be seen in White House reluctance so
far to give credulity to the latest `evidence’ on Iran’s nuclear
weapons plans.

An agreed-upon casus belli can be hard to create when one partner
wants war within the next 12 weeks and the other does not. The
pressure from Netanyahu and neocon cheerleaders like Jennifer Rubin –
not to mention Mitt Romney – will increase as the election draws
nearer, agreed-upon casus belli or not.

Netanyahu gives every evidence of believing that – for the next 12
weeks – he is in the catbird seat and that, if he provokes hostilities
with Iran, Obama will feel compelled to jump in with both feet, i. e.,
selecting from the vast array of forces already assembled in the area.

Sadly, I believe Netanyahu is probably correct in that calculation.
Batten down the hatches.

Ray McGovern was an Army officer and CIA analyst for almost 30 year.
He now serves on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity. He is a contributor to Hopeless: Barack
Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK Press).

http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/08/13/will-israel-strike-iran-before-the-election/

Turks Counter High School Genocide Classes

Turks Counter High School Genocide Classes

Opinion | August 13, 2012 2:14 pm

By Tom Vartabedian

Just when you think life has dealt you a pat hand, along comes a
conniver to steal your pot.

For the past four years, members of our Armenian Genocide Education
Committee of Merrimack Valley have filtered in and out of high schools
north of Boston.

We have also expanded our reach to include schools around Greater
Boston, like Newton South. Scores of children have benefited by our
lessons. In most every case, instructors have been overwhelmed by the
impact being made for they, too, come out learning a valuable lesson
in history.

There hasn’t been one repercussion, not even a grunt from a naysayer –
until now. A vile and vindictive article from a pro-Turkish website
() enraged me, bearing the headline: `Armenians
Spreading Their Lies at High Schools.’

The gutless piece failed to carry a by-line, thus making it more
intolerable. What’s more, a photograph of Wilmington High students
holding samples of postage stamps they had designed carried the
inscription: `Their Lies Reached Schools.’

The group photo also had the two presenters that day – myself and
Albert S. Movsesian. The event was to generate ideas for a postage
stamp to be sent to the Postmaster General of the United States in an
effort to get a commemorative stamp for the 100th anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide in 2015.

A completely harmless project meant to both elucidate and arouse our
younger non- Armenian population was slurred with malice.

The rebuttal was generated in response to an all-encompassing piece
written by Chairman Dro Kanayan, giving readers a fairly detailed
account of the progress made in schools this year. How effective has
it been?

While attending a grand-niece’s Chelmsford High graduation party the
week before, I approached a table occupied by students who had been
addressed during a genocide class taught by Jennifer Doak.

`Hey, you look familiar. Aren’t you the guy who spoke to us about the
Armenian Genocide?’ a co-ed remarked.

`Yes, that’s me,’ I replied. `What do you remember most about the
class?’ `How difficult it was for your race to be slaughtered like
that,’ she replied. `We loved the story about the Calvin Coolidge
Orphan Rug and how it found its way to the White House.’

The article goes go to say that the `Armenian Diaspora is spreading
its lies by telling them at high schools.’

The next paragraph quoted Kanayan’s story:

`Armenian researcher Dro Kanayan said for those people who feel that
our elders and the youth cannot work together, don’t worry.

`Kanayan and both of his peers, Albert Movsesian and Tom Vartabedian,
have been working together to have the so-called Armenian Genocide
included in the high school curriculum on Human Rights in the
Merrimack Valley.

`They are teaching students about the so- called Armenian Genocide and
Armenian culture.’

The story goes on to say how we have `poisoned’ the students in over
10 high schools, providing individual classroom presentation on
comparative genocides over the past 100 years The account proceeded to
implement other high schools including a deaf student we had
encountered at Newton South who learned about the Genocide through
American Sign Language.

Adding more insult to injury, a second photo was used of Dro Kanayan
holding a picture of his famous grandfather General Dro, who led the
siege at Bash Abaran during World War I.

I should be fuming over such poppycock. Instead, I hold no regret over
those who are ill-informed and continue to show their absurdity. The
more Turkey refutes histori- cal fact, the more scornful it becomes.
The more truth will prevail and people will see how superficial the
Turkish government continues to remain.

I recall once how vandals had climbed to the top of a billboard in
Watertown and defaced a Genocide sign that had been sponsored by
activist/artist Daniel Varoujan Hejinian. For years, Hejinian has been
putting up these notices to draw attention during April 24.

For the most part, the Armenian papers have publicized the act, but
nothing ever caught the attention of the American press, which matters
more.

The fact that some screwball scaled a building at night to commit an
act of degradation suddenly became media hype. It appeared in
newspapers and television networks, giving the Armenian Genocide more
exposure than normal.

During a commemoration that week in Merrimack Valley, a local priest
approached the podium and remarked about the insanity.

`If that’s the way our genocide is going to catch the outside public’s
eye, then let the billboards be vandalized,’ he lashed out. `And let
those responsible find guilt in the process.’

Armenians spreading their lies in our high schools? Students being
misinformed? Human rights not being violated?

We must be living in a Utopia.

(Tom Vartabedian is a former photographer journalist for The Haverhill
Gazette and a frequent contributor to the Mirror-Spectator.)

http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2012/08/13/turks-counter-high-school-genocide-classes/
www.historyoftruth.com